A Snakebite That Sparked a Change

Context:

  • Kerala declared snakebite envenomation a disease of public health importance on October 10, 2025, joining Karnataka and Tamil Nadu.

  • The decision aligns with the National Action Plan for Snakebite Envenoming, which targets a 50% reduction in snakebite deaths by 2030, and reflects a shift from treating snakebites as isolated incidents to a systemic public health challenge.

Key Highlights:

Government Initiative / Policy Details

  • Inclusion of snakebite envenomation under the Kerala Public Health Act, 2023 enables:

    • Mandatory case reporting and tracking

    • Improved resource allocation and surveillance

  • Policy focus on prevention, early response, and treatment access.

Technology & Community-Based Intervention

  • SARPA (Snake Awareness, Rescue, and Protection App) launched in August 2020:

    • Connects citizens with trained snake rescuers

    • Provides first-aid guidance and promotes scientific rescue methods

  • Outcomes:

    • Snakebite deaths reduced from 123 (2018–19) to 34 (2024–25)

    • Nearly 58,000 snakes rescued and safely released

Public Health & Infrastructure Measures

  • Triggered by tragic incidents such as Shehala Sherin’s death (2019) in a school, leading to:

    • Infrastructure upgrades

    • Safety guidelines in educational institutions

  • Emphasis on pre-hospital care, ambulance services, and early referral.

Epidemiological & Environmental Factors

  • Kerala reports about 5,000 snakebite cases annually, driven by:

    • Dense forests and wetlands

    • High population density

  • Changing patterns:

    • Rise in hump-nosed pit viper bites linked to agricultural shifts

    • Existing anti-snake venom (ASV) less effective against this species

ASV Access & Innovation

  • Plan to locally produce ASV to address:

    • Geographical variation in venom potency

    • Limited efficacy of current polyvalent antivenoms

  • Challenges include clinical hesitancy in ASV administration and training gaps.

Social & Legal Dimensions

  • The Sooraj Kumar case (2020), involving murder using a cobra, exposed illegal wildlife trade risks.

  • Lifestyle changes (e.g., elimination of open defecation, mechanised farming) have reduced human–snake encounters.

Relevant Prelims Points:

  • Issue: High morbidity and mortality due to snakebite envenomation.

  • Causes:

    • Ecological overlap between humans and snakes

    • Delayed treatment and limited ASV effectiveness

  • Government Initiatives:

    • National Action Plan for Snakebite Envenoming

    • SARPA mobile application

  • Benefits:

    • Improved surveillance and rapid response

    • Reduced mortality

  • Challenges:

    • Species-specific venom variation

    • Pre-hospital care gaps

  • Impact:

    • Stronger public health response and community awareness

Relevant Mains Points:

  • Definitions & Concepts:

    • Snakebite Envenomation: Venom injection causing systemic poisoning

    • ASV (Anti-Snake Venom): Antibody-based treatment for envenomation

    • Epidemiological Insights: Patterns and determinants of snakebite incidence

  • Governance & Social Justice Dimension:

    • Recognising snakebite as a public health issue improves equitable access to care, especially for rural and tribal populations.

  • Environment & Health Linkage:

    • Biodiversity, land-use change, and climate influence snakebite patterns.

  • Way Forward:

    • Scale state-level surveillance systems nationwide

    • Invest in species-specific and region-specific ASV

    • Strengthen training for clinicians and first responders

    • Expand community education and digital tools like SARPA

UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):

  • GS 2: Governance, Public Health Policy, Social Justice

  • GS 3: Environment & Ecology, Health Systems

  • Prelims: Snakebite envenomation, ASV, Public Health Acts

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